This Article applies the emerging field of information markets to the prediction of Supreme Court decisions. Information markets, which aggregate information from a wide array of participants, have proven highly accurate in other contexts such as predicting presidential elections. Yet never before have they been applied to the Supreme Court, and the field of predicting Supreme Court outcomes remains underdeveloped as a result. We believe that creating a Supreme Court information market, which we have named Tiresias after the mythological Greek seer, will produce remarkably accurate predictions, create significant monetary value for participants, provide guidance for lower courts, and advance the development of information markets
We explore the idea that authoring a piece of text is an act of maximizing one's expected utility.To...
We examine how the Supreme Court uses signals and indices from lower courts to determine which cases...
This Article evaluates different rhetorical strategies Supreme Court justices employ in writing thei...
This Article applies the emerging field of information markets to the prediction of Supreme Court de...
Every year the Supreme Court of the United States captivates the minds and curiosity of millions of ...
We estimate an equilibrium model of decision making in the US Supreme Court that takes into account ...
We estimate an equilibrium model of decision-making in the US Supreme Court which takes into accoun...
Enthusiasm for many minds arguments has infected legal academia. Scholars now champion the virtues...
This Article focuses on why information markets have covered certain subject areas, sometimes of min...
We estimate an equilibrium model of decision-making in the US Supreme Court which takes into account...
The role of law clerks at the United States Supreme Court has long been a source of curiosity among ...
The Empirical Legal Studies (ELS) movement is making strides toward understanding judicial behavior,...
Predictive judicial analytics holds the promise of increasing efficiency and fairness of law. Judici...
A substantial portion of constitutional law rests on untested factual predictions made by the Suprem...
Information markets provide a revolutionary mechanism for revealing aggregate knowledge. They contin...
We explore the idea that authoring a piece of text is an act of maximizing one's expected utility.To...
We examine how the Supreme Court uses signals and indices from lower courts to determine which cases...
This Article evaluates different rhetorical strategies Supreme Court justices employ in writing thei...
This Article applies the emerging field of information markets to the prediction of Supreme Court de...
Every year the Supreme Court of the United States captivates the minds and curiosity of millions of ...
We estimate an equilibrium model of decision making in the US Supreme Court that takes into account ...
We estimate an equilibrium model of decision-making in the US Supreme Court which takes into accoun...
Enthusiasm for many minds arguments has infected legal academia. Scholars now champion the virtues...
This Article focuses on why information markets have covered certain subject areas, sometimes of min...
We estimate an equilibrium model of decision-making in the US Supreme Court which takes into account...
The role of law clerks at the United States Supreme Court has long been a source of curiosity among ...
The Empirical Legal Studies (ELS) movement is making strides toward understanding judicial behavior,...
Predictive judicial analytics holds the promise of increasing efficiency and fairness of law. Judici...
A substantial portion of constitutional law rests on untested factual predictions made by the Suprem...
Information markets provide a revolutionary mechanism for revealing aggregate knowledge. They contin...
We explore the idea that authoring a piece of text is an act of maximizing one's expected utility.To...
We examine how the Supreme Court uses signals and indices from lower courts to determine which cases...
This Article evaluates different rhetorical strategies Supreme Court justices employ in writing thei...